Of course, that doesn't explain why Whigham went against his opinion and claimed that CBM did design MCC upon his death in 1939.
I am just reaching a bit to figure out how one entity could see things one way, and another a completely different way. Of cousre, if you have been through a divorce, you know such things can happen!
Whigham exaggerates at least once in his eulogy. He calls Yale a Macdonald-Raynor course. According to Ran's profile, that is not accurate. Ran says,
"And as George Bahto, the leading Macdonald/Raynor historian, points out, it is Raynor and not Macdonald that deserves the credit for Yale. Bahto found an article from Charles 'Steam Shovel' Banks, who worked on the Yale construction team. The article appeared in an Alumnae Bulletin in 1929 and in it, Banks writes, Raynor deserves credit for 'what is today considered by many to be the outstanding inland golf course of America.' Banks went on, 'Mr. Macdonald, who served on the advisory committee, was familiar with the plans from the outset, but Mr. Raynor was the real genius of this masterpiece, who made the layout, designed the greens, and gave the work of construction his supervision from start to finish.'"
Actually, that sounds a lot like what Merion says CBM did at MCC. He was familiar with Merion's plans from the outset, played an advisory role, but someone else (Wilson) made the layout and built the course.
If Whigham was wrong about Yale, perhaps he was wrong about Merion, too. And as others have pointed out, he isn't only calling Merion a CBM course. He's calling it a CBM-SR course. As I understand it, there is zero reference to or record of Raynor ever doing a thing at Merion. Yet Whigham, in this eulogy, gives SR half credit for Merion's design.
Another possibility: Whigham may simply have been wrong about CBM and Merion. I have seen this many times. People (incorrectly) give themselves and their friends/associates/relatives credit for things they never did.
This does not require anyone to lie: they often believe they are right. Especially if the people involved have or had some association with the project in question. Brilliant people can be as guilty of this as anyone else.
Also, memories 30 years later often get distorted and exaggerated. When Whigham wrote CBM's eulogy, he was in his late 60's or early 70's.
Interesting side note: Whigham won his 2nd U.S. Amateur in 1897 at the Chicago Golf Club. In the final, he shot 87 for the 1st 18 holes, and led 7 up. His opponent shot 97. Whigham shot 44 in the first nine of the 2nd round, and picked up another hole: his opponent shot 46. You can see the scorecards at:
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9F01E5DD1039E433A2575AC1A96F9C94669ED7CFMaybe I'm missing something. Seems like these guys were far from scratch golfers.
I'm curious, what did CBM shoot back in those days? Mid-80's, like his pal Whigham? e.g., did he play in the 1897 Amateur at Chicago Golf Club, a course he designed?